“Alain Miles was born in Kent in the black and white era, and now survives in Cambridge. In between, he has had a colorful, occasionally glittering career as an English language teacher and coursebook writer, radio and TV presenter, events organizer, publisher, computer manufacturer, HR specialist and web designer.

Very little of the above would have been possible if he had not spent most of his career in the Mid-East, where no questions were asked. He maintains that writing is a new and exciting option, categorically denying that all other career paths are now closed to him.

His first novel, “The Lebanese Troubles” mirrors the eclecticism - indecisiveness - of his working-life. It’s a story set in a time of war, yet not a war novel; it’s an adventure lacking a hero; it’s a romance without a lead. Alain himself calls it a comi-tragedy. But whatever the genre, if you love Hardy, Fowles, Camus, you won’t be disappointed.”

Source: Amazon.co.uk

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Alain-Miles/e/B003HDDF54/ref=nttdpepwbk_0

Nice to see a certain R J Jowett use his forum there as some kind of machine code support group ;)

It’s interesting to see where people end up who have somehow influenced your life. The Sam Coupe played an influential part in my life from the age of 13.

I have found Alan Miles entire career info on a professional connection network:

Summary

I’m an entrepreneur who loves the challenge of new ideas, and building new businesses. In the 1980s I took my award-winning UK computer design business from a 2-man partnership to a public company. In the 1990s my pioneering job creation business put thousands of unemployed school and college-leavers to work in the Arab Gulf. For 15 years my custom-designed HR software application was used by prestige clients in the Middle East - banks, hotels, airlines, construction, hospitals, government agencies.

My latest project, The HROomph Initiative, takes a fresh look at the way businesses manage people. Time and again I’ve seen companies taking on board new theories, purchasing expensive software, and then getting bogged down in the detail. Instead of driving the business forward, HR seems to be holding it back. slowing it down, adding unnecessary levels of complexity. What I want to see is ‘less HR, more achievement’.

I’ll be expanding on these ideas on the HROomph website and then, by mid-2013, launching a set of management tools that’ll put theory into practice.

At present, this is a think-tank, not a company. We’ll be presenting and discussing new approaches to HR in the HROomph blog, developing management software to put the principles into practice, and asking for feedback from like-minded HR specialists who’d like to get directly involved.

* HR Consultant and Software Designer.
* Designer of Prospero - an integrated HR, Admin and Payroll package for business in the Arab Gulf.
* Sold the product to leading businesses - banks, hotels, hospitals, construction, airlines government agencies in Bahrain, Dubai and Oman.

Director
CareerCraft
1992 – 1997 (5 years)

Pioneered a job creation initiative for unemployed Gulf nationals in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Kuwait - through a three-month classroom-based, project-oriented programme, followed by three months of mentor-assisted work experience.

I founded the business, shaped the program, wrote course materials, and designed the program management software - which was the foundation for the software used in my next venture.

Director
Miles Gordon Technology
1986 – 1991 (5 years)

Joint founder of the UK company that designed and built the Sam Coupe computer.

Voted Best Computer of the year and Best Newcomers by the UK’s Leisure Software industry in 1990. Disappeared almost without trace shortly afterwards - has a way of happening to plankton when there are big fish around.

Mid-East Manager
Sinclair Research
June 1984 – April 1986 (1 year 11 months)

Introduced the Sinclair range of home computers across the Mid-East, Pakistan, Turkey, setting up agencies in 12 countries.

“Miles draws heavily on his extensive Middle East experience to bring each scene in the book vividly to life, with detailed and authentic descriptions of both Lebanon and its people that kept me fully engaged. He effectively uses the subject of war as a metaphor to explore the theme of disintegration of intimate relationships, and the reader is left contemplating the nature of loyalty and trust in everyday life.”

“Miles’ descriptive skills make Lebanon herself into the main character, brimming with magic and mystery. A great read.”

“As the field of indie publishing broadens it will be books like this that will shape it … one of the best choices available to put on a Kindle.”

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

Poll

Megademo: Stupid Pointless Cool You could have spent all that time writing a game! Oooh, interesting, I wonder how they did that? Wow, I never knew my Sam could do that! Meh, that's not as good as Lyra III...